Sir Charles Walker (Broxbourne) (Con) Sadly, some children and
young people are not able to live safely with their families. The
significant majority of these children have experienced trauma at a
point during their developmental years, resulting in a range of
behaviours, many of which cause distress to them or others. Those
behaviours include self-harm and an increased vulnerability to
criminal exploitation. If a young person is unable to live safely
at home, he or she may...Request free
trial
(Broxbourne) (Con)
Sadly, some children and young people are not able to live safely
with their families. The significant majority of these children
have experienced trauma at a point during their developmental
years, resulting in a range of behaviours, many of which cause
distress to them or others. Those behaviours include self-harm
and an increased vulnerability to criminal exploitation.
If a young person is unable to live safely at home, he or she may
come into the care of the local authority or require hospital
care. There is currently an insufficient supply of specialist
care to meet the needs of such young people. As a result of the
challenges posed by covid-19, health and social care
professionals describe an unprecedented level of complexity and
acuity of need, making an already difficult situation worse.
When a young person comes into care they will require either a
children’s home, with staff skilled and experienced in meeting
complex needs, or in some instances a court-directed placement
into a secure unit, to keep them safe. Over the past 18 months,
Hertfordshire children’s service has made three applications to
the national secure bed bank. Despite repeated referrals, a
secure placement was achieved for only one child. The most recent
referral was made approximately six weeks ago, and on that
occasion the local authority was advised that there were 50
referrals for only four available beds. That means that a secure
bed was not available for 46 young people who had been assessed
as requiring such accommodation to keep them safe. In each of
those cases, the relevant authorities, including Hertfordshire,
were required to make their own arrangements while the secure
referral remained active.
Increasingly, local authorities turn to the courts for a
deprivation of liberty order in the absence of more appropriate
secure placements. Such orders are sought as a last resort, even
though when granted they can place local authorities in the
invidious position of having knowingly to place children in
environments that are not best suited or equipped to meet their
complex needs. Similarly, young people who require psychiatric
hospital care find such care unavailable because of a shortage of
appropriate hospital beds. In Hertfordshire, a number of young
people have been assessed as detainable under the Mental Health
Act 1983 and are waiting for appropriate hospital beds. The
number waiting for a placement often rests at around 10 children,
which means that in each of their cases their needs are not being
met.
Despite people’s best efforts, the whole system is creaking
because it is unable to cope with the demand. Problems with
recruitment and the increasing complexity of some children’s
needs mean that Ofsted and the Care Quality Commission too often
find themselves in the position of having to close providers
down, or reduce their bed capacity. It is important to note that
there is a difference between physical beds and usable beds. Many
beds are not in service because, in meeting the increasingly
complex needs of children in care, there is not the staff
capacity safely to service all the available beds in a home.
Not only is the current situation having a detrimental impact on
young people, but its impact on the public purse is significant.
Delivering bespoke care to a young person, often through a
commissioned provider, is very expensive, particularly because
these young people, due to the risks they present, will require
high staffing levels. Placements are expensive: they can cost
from £4,500 a week to upwards of £30,000 a week. Often, a child
who has difficulty accessing support further down the needs scale
quickly ends up requiring a far most costly set of interventions
and specialist care.
It is of course important to intervene early to work with young
people in the community to prevent family breakdown and the
escalation of needs, but the current placement situation must be
addressed, so in this debate I wish to ask regulators to work
with the care sector to reopen closed beds through the
development of a specialist taskforce that supports providers—be
they mental health providers, social care providers or specialist
schools—that struggle to deliver good-quality care. Alongside
such efforts, we should make a national intervention to reassure
providers that their Ofsted rating will not be negatively
impacted if they admit children with the most challenging of
needs. Too often, specialist care providers will refuse these
children because they are concerned that if a child absconds or
creates a high level of service demand, that will negatively
affect their Ofsted rating.
We also need a national campaign both to challenge the
stereotypes about children in care and to recruit residential
childcare officers. Such schemes are already in place for
fostering and adoption, and we have Teach First and Think Ahead.
A similar programme now needs to be introduced to attract people
into child social care and, in particular, the care of children
with high levels of need.
Backing up this recruitment drive, we need a programme of support
to design children’s homes that can accommodate children with the
most complex needs but, as I have already said, without extra
specialist staff the Government programme to match fund local
authorities to develop new children’s homes will face significant
challenges. New homes require skilled staff if they are to be
viable. Also, in wanting to build new specialist homes, we need
to appeal to the better part of people’s human nature, as too
many of these specialist homes, when they come up for planning
approval, are opposed by local communities.
When it comes to registering specialist residential care homes
and facilities, we need to find a way of expediting the Ofsted
registration process, which can take upwards of three months. In
an emergency, a local authority will sometimes use one of its
bedroomed properties as a care setting for a vulnerable child or
adolescent, with a rota of specialist social care staff in
attendance. Without Ofsted registration, such facilities will be
operating outside the regulatory framework.
(Broxtowe) (Con)
I hear my hon. Friend’s point about care in the community, which
is essential and something we need to focus on. Children and
young people with complex needs too often end up in hospital,
which is not the right place for them, as they end up being
affected by people in hospital with other issues. Care in the
community is essential. How can we give local authorities the
onus and the investment to make this happen?
I thank my hon. Friend for his intervention, and I will come on
to that. We need to have the right setting delivering the right
care—the care that the child needs. The child needs to be at the
centre of that care.
How does a care emergency arise? That question is often put to
me. Beyond the national shortage of beds, a provider can notify a
local authority, with only a few hours’ notice, that it will be
terminating a young person’s placement in its facility. They can
say, “In just a few hours, you will have this child back. This
child is now your problem again.” This practice needs to be
eliminated, but eliminating it will only alleviate the need for
the provision of emergency accommodation and care; it will not
end it. That will be done only through the provision of more
beds, in both the social care sector and the psychiatric care
sector. In the psychiatric care sector, it is not just the
overall quantum of beds that counts; it is also the type of bed.
These will cover general adolescent units, eating disorders,
low-secure units and psychiatric intensive care units.
Almost all the concerns I have highlighted and will highlight
this afternoon were identified in Sir Martin Narey’s independent
review of residential care and in the Government’s response of
2016. We need to implement the findings of this report and tie
them into a review of the Care Standards Act 2000 and the
children’s homes regulations.
If anyone watching or listening to this debate wants to learn
more about what is happening in this sector, I refer them to an
excellent report by the BBC correspondent Sanchia Berg that can
be found on the BBC website, dated 12 November, “The court orders
depriving vulnerable children of their ‘liberty’”. The report
contains harrowing accounts of what is happening, and they are
framed throughout by the concerns of the High Court judge Sir
Alistair MacDonald, who is deeply concerned about what he is
witnessing in the courts and family courts.
Let me return to Sir Martin Narey’s independent review. Beyond
its implementation, we need better joined-up care between the NHS
and local authorities. The continuing healthcare framework has
much to recommend it in relation to children and adolescents, but
it is still heavily slanted towards their physical health. A
robust commitment to parity of esteem would see the framework
cover clinically diagnosed mental illness, as well as the
challenges caused by trauma, attachment difficulties and,
increasingly, autism. Let me say, as an aside, that all
Department of Health legislation should make it perfectly clear
that health means mental health and physical health; we cannot
have one without the other.
Why is mental health so important? There are still far too many
lengthy debates between local authorities and the NHS as to
whether a child is suffering from a mental illness or a
behavioural difficulty. To many, this seems like dancing on the
head of a pin, as the debate does not change the fact that at the
heart of the discussion is a child in crisis, as referred to by
my hon. Friend the Member for Broxtowe (). A good solution has to be
more joint commissioning between health, education and care
providers, thereby removing barriers to joint funding. An example
of best practice can be found in my own county of Hertfordshire,
where we are opening up a three-bed unit that will be jointly
staffed by social care professionals and mental health
professionals. Perhaps this initiative could pave the way for a
national programme of hybrid mental health children’s homes, with
a hybrid model of worker.
I must conclude by returning to staffing and recruitment. There
really is a need for an enhanced programme of training for
residential workers that recognises the unique challenges of the
role and the high level of skill required to deliver an effective
service. Residential work currently requires a lesser
qualification than social work, yet those working in residential
settings have significantly more direct contact with the most
vulnerable children with the most complex needs. Better training
would lead to better pay and an enhanced profile, thereby making
the role a career of choice and one which is attractive to
graduates.
I have made these recommendations and observations today on
behalf of the excellent Hertfordshire County Council, which does
a fabulous job across my county, and, of course, on behalf of the
children for which it cares. Both Hertfordshire County Council
and I want to support the Government’s programme to develop more
beds in the secure estate, but we want an estate that is
compassionate and able to provide the high levels of care and
support that I know, the Minister knows and Madam Deputy Speaker
knows, it wants to provide.
14:53:00
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Health and Social
Care ()
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Broxbourne ( ) for securing this important
debate on care for children and young people with complex needs,
and thank him for highlighting good practice in his constituency
and across his local authority.
The Government are committed to ensuring that all children and
young people who need care—be that health or social care—receive
the safe and compassionate care that we should all expect. We are
taking action to support all children and young people’s mental
health, and to support those with complex needs to stay well in
the community. This support starts at birth.
The Chancellor recently announced £300 million for family and
early years support in half of upper-tier local authorities over
the next spending review period. This includes: £100 million to
roll out bespoke parent-infant mental health support to nurture
parent-infant relationships, and improve access to perinatal
mental health support; £50 million to fund evidence-based
parenting programmes; and £82 million to create a network of
family hubs. In addition, the Chancellor confirmed £200 million
for the supporting families programme, increasing the number of
families supported by the programme from 70,000 in 2021-22 to
more than 100,000 in 2024-25.
For school-age children, we continue to implement the proposals
of the children and young people’s mental health Green Paper. In
March, we announced £79 million to boost mental health support
for children and young people in England. Part of that will
accelerate the roll-out of mental health support teams in schools
and colleges to cover around 3 million children and young people
by 2023. In May, the Department for Education announced funding
worth £9.5 million, which will allow up to 7,800 education
settings in England to train a senior mental health lead from
their staff in the next academic year.
We are also taking steps to support children and young people
with learning disabilities and autism through our newly published
national autism strategy, the first autism strategy to be
extended to children and young people as well as adults. The
strategy is backed by over £74 million for the first year. That
includes £3.5 million to help local systems identify children and
young people on waiting lists who might be at risk of crisis, and
£3 million for respite and short breaks to help families and
autistic children and young people with and without learning
disability who have struggled during the pandemic.
The independent review of children’s social care, which commenced
in March 2021, will look at the needs, experiences and outcomes
for the children supported by children’s social care. We know,
sadly, that there are some children and young people who will
need in-patient care or a place in a secure setting. NHS England
is accountable for the provision of in-patient mental health
services for children and young people. In line with the NHS
long-term plan, some of the commissioning tasks and relevant
budget have been delegated to NHS-led provider
collaboratives.
My understanding of the point that my hon. Friend the Member for
Broxbourne was making is that we should make sure that the
investment goes into residential care. The Minister is talking
about the money and the investment being put into in-patient
care, but that should really be put into residential care. Will
she please comment on that? In addition, taking that a step
further, should areas with residential care and the staff
equipped to deal with children with complex needs not eventually
get people into supported living so that we can ultimately get
them into independent living?
My hon. Friend makes a very good point, and I will come to that
later in my speech.
The lead provider works collaboratively with other providers to
ensure the appropriate level of in-patient provision in their
area; it is important that we have the right mix of provision,
whether it is in-patient or community support. They also ensure
that the right community services are available to support
children and young people when they are discharged to prevent
further crises.
Wherever possible, collaboratives will aim to provide
high-quality alternatives to admission. However, where stays are
required, they should be short and close to home in a
high-quality, safe and therapeutic service. We must of course
ensure that the rights of children and young people who are
placed under the Mental Health Act 1983 are respected.
We published our White Paper on reforming the Mental Health Act
in January 2021, setting out proposals to make the Act work
better for people. We are committed to ensuring that the reforms
we want to make to the Act also benefit children and young
people. We will work to ensure that the rights we plan to
introduce for patients are also available to children and young
people detained under the Act. Reforms to the Act will limit the
scope to detain people with a learning disability or autistic
people, helping to reduce unnecessary detentions. To ensure that
in-patient settings are therapeutic for autistic people, we are
providing £4 million to enable in-patient settings to become more
autism friendly.
In children’s social care, we are committed to doing everything
we can to support local authorities in ensuring that the most
vulnerable children are protected and that there are sufficient
places for children in their care. The Government have given more
than £6 billion in un-ringfenced funding directly to councils to
support them with the impact of covid-19 spending pressures,
including in children’s social services.
I take the opportunity to refer briefly to the a point made by
the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care in the House a
few days ago. He set out that we will be taking further measures
to support and protect social care against the threat posed by
the omicron variant. We will set out a package of measures at the
earliest opportunity. I reassure hon. Members that the timing of
the announcement will not have an impact on our ability to
implement those protections on the intended date.
The Government are also taking additional steps to support local
authorities to fulfil their statutory duties. The spending review
2021 announced £259 million over the spending review period to
maintain capacity and expand provision in secure and open
residential children’s homes. That will provide high-quality safe
homes for some of our most vulnerable children and young
people.
We recognise that those in the secure estate are some of the most
vulnerable in our society. Children and young people in secure
settings are more likely than other young people their age to
have additional healthcare needs. The integrated care framework
aims to support trauma-informed care, and formulation-driven
evidence-based whole-system approaches to creating change for
children and young people within the children and young people
secure estate.
My hon. Friend the Member for Broxbourne talked about beds. In
the NHS long-term plan, we committed to investing at least an
additional £2.3 billion in mental health services by 2023-24.
That will see 345,000 children and young people a year accessing
NHS-funded specialist mental health support if they need it. On 5
March, we announced an additional £79 million of funding that
will be used to expand children’s mental health services
significantly in this financial year. It will also help to
improve access and reduce waiting times for NHS community mental
health support.
There is much to be said about how we are supporting and should
further support children and young people, not least those who,
because of mental illness, learning disabilities, being autistic
or complex trauma, are some of the most vulnerable in our
society.
On a point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. The Minister’s
Department asked for my speaking notes, which I provided earlier
in the week, but barely a question I raised was answered by her.
It is not her fault, but I have just had generalities; we got on
to social care when I was talking specifically about care for
children with a high amount of need. I am confused: what is the
point of providing notes to officials in advance of an
Adjournment debate if the Minister is not equipped—it is not her
fault—with the speech to respond?
Madam Deputy Speaker ( )
I took the hon. Gentleman’s raised eyebrows as an indication that
he wished to raise a point of order before I adjourn the House.
We could have had more time on the debate, so I gave him the
opportunity to make the point. The Minister is at liberty to say
whatever she wishes at the Dispatch Box—that is not a matter for
me—but she may wish to respond to his point.
Further to that point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. I promise
to write to my hon. Friend on the specific issues that he raised
and I will look into them very seriously.
Further to that point of order, Madam Deputy Speaker. I thank the
Minister for that kind offer. It was not an attack on her—I think
she is as disappointed as I am.
Madam Deputy Speaker
I appreciate the points that the hon. Gentleman and the Minister
have made.
Question put and agreed to.
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